http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20070202-013112-8664r

Space station moves to avoid debris

MOSCOW, Feb. 2 (UPI) -- U.S. and Russian officials changed the International 
Space 
Station's orbit to keep it clear of debris from a satellite destroyed by China, 
a report 
says. 

"We are diverting the orbit of the ISS to prevent a possible collision with 
large 
fragments of space debris, a decision the Russian Mission Control took together 
with the 
Johnson Space Center in Houston," a Russian Mission Control spokesman told 
Novosti 
Friday. 

The spokesman said the debris did not threaten the space station, and that an 
anti-
meteorite system protected it from smaller fragments. 

China set off an international protest when it announced in January it had used 
a ground-
based missile to hit one its aging weather satellites, Novosti reported. 

The United States filed a diplomatic protest, Novosti said, because the weather 
satellite 
used approximately the same orbit as its spy satellites. Canada, Australia and 
Japan also 
objected. 

Russian and U.S. space agencies were both tracking fragments from the weather 
satellite. 
U.S. officials said they were following 525 large fragments and had recorded 
between 500 
and 600 instances of debris passing within three miles of orbiting satellites.

----------------------------

Does anyone know more about the 'anti-meteorite system' that protects the ISS 
from being 
struck?  'Shields Up Scotty!'

Gary
http://www.meteorite-dealers.com


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